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King Fire surges to nearly 30,000 acres


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Pyro cumulus clouds from the King Fire taken from Taylor Creek on Sept. 17. Photo/Toogee Sielsch

Pyro cumulus clouds from the King Fire taken from Taylor Creek on Sept. 17. Photo/Toogee Sielsch

Updated Sept. 17 7:05pm:

The King Fire burning northeast of Pollock Pines is at 27,930 acres and remains at 5 percent containment as of Wednesday night.

It is burning in steep, rugged terrain at a rapid rate north.

Highway 50 in the American River Canyon was opened Wednesday afternoon. However, it is one lane traffic from three miles east of Pollock Pines to Pollock Pines. Smoke is thick in the area.

No structures have been lost, but more than 2,000 residences are threatened along with more than 1,000 other buildings.

The mandatory closure to all residences south of Highway 50 between Fresh Pond and Riverton has been changed to a voluntary advisory. There are mandatory evacuations for Volcanoville, Quintette, Blodgett and Upper Ice House. As of late this afternoon more mandatory evacuations have been ordered for Crystal Basin: Granite Springs, Ice House Road (east side), Pickett Pen Road, Rubicon Trail, Windmiller Trail, Wrights Lake Road, including all Forest Service roads, trails, and access roads in the Crystal Basin recreation area between Ice House Road and Desolation Wilderness, north of the Highway 50 corridor.

This afternoon the fire made a significant run to the northwest necessitating the mandatory evacuation order for Quintette and Volcanoville,” CalFire said in a statement. “It became very active in the afternoon with spotting up to one half mile.”

Rain is in the forecast for the next three days. 

The Seventh-day Adventist Church is the Red Cross center.

There is still no cause for the blaze that started Sept. 13.

Pollock Pines Elementary School District will resume classes Sept. 18.

Two people have been injured, but a CalFire spokesperson did not have the extent of the injuries nor did he know they were firefighters.

South Lake Tahoe, Lake Valley and the California Conservation Corps in Meyers have sent people to help fight the fire. They are among the more than 2,500 people fighting the fire, along with the resources of 11 helicopters, 245 engines, 43 dozers and 57 water tenders.

Smoke continues to be an issue in the Lake Tahoe Basin, Truckee, Carson City and Reno areas. El Dorado County Air Quality Management District and Health and Human Services Agency – Public Health Division has issued an advisory regarding air quality. Fine particles in smoke can cause health issues, especially for children, older people or those with respiratory problems. 

“Driving from Auburn to Tahoe Tuesday afternoon, the smoke along I-80 became extremely thick and irritating to the eyes over Donner Summit and into Truckee,” Bill Kingman told Lake Tahoe News. “Visibility was brown air and only for a short distance. I likened it to Los Angeles on a good day. The smoke lessened slightly going over Highway 267 to Kings Beach, but you could not see the lake from the summit nor could you see across the lake at all.”

Here is a time lapse video of the King Fire smoke coming into the Tahoe basin. It was shot from UNR’s mountaintop camera at Heavenly’s Angel’s Roost.

— Lake Tahoe News staff report

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Comments

Comments (21)
  1. rainparader says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    I haven’t noticed smoke here in South Shore….yet. Stay safe out there firefighters!

  2. Reloman says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    Yesterday in carson it was bad, coming over to the point where you first see the lake, you couldn’t see it because of all of the smoke. This came on quick as when we came to carson all was fine.

  3. laura says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    Your comment about Los angeles on a good day…not appreciated!

  4. cosa pescado says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    That map is awesome. ESRI made it or a local agency?

  5. Shawn says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    Wonder how long until its in desolation wilderness.

  6. Tahoebluewire says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    This one is the real deal. No way to stop it, worse than the Cleveland fire at ice house back in the. 90s. All my favorite old haunts are going up. Stumpy Meadows just torched. Good for the forest in the long run, bad for nostalgic dudes like me in the short run.

  7. Tahoebluewire says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    Desolation may be all that stops it from reaching Tahoe. Lots of Granite. Fire burning South of Round Top now in Mokulumne wilderness.

  8. Moral Hazard says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    Cosa, NOAA deploys a fire weather analyst to Type 1 incidents. They take GIS data from observations and then overlay it on base maps by ESRI. If you google ESRI base maps you can go to the base map page. Its pretty slick, one click of a button there and you get free dynamic base mapping.

  9. 26intahoe says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    This fire is out of control. About 4:pm saw a large plume to the west. 4:30 to 5:00, started to look like a hill range. Look for alot of more land by morning.

  10. cosa pescado says - Posted: September 17, 2014

    I am currently working on a project that uses ESRI products for online mapping. I’ve maintained my own license for a few years. Just starting with the online presentation, never done a map with time enabled layers. Mostly wondering who is paying for those kind of projects. ESRI’s ‘story maps’ are really cool. There is one of the Battle of Gettysburg that shows off what they do very well.
    Just think what we could be doing if we invested in the data collection that would enable us to have accurate fuel models for the entire state. Mmmm. Data.

  11. Moral Hazard says - Posted: September 18, 2014

    I have stayed away from the online program because of the licensing. I still like desktop, but it looks like they want to move to web based applications.

    There is pretty good data available, but of course pretty good is subjective. The only problem is that people try to use this stuff for purposes it was never intended for. The resolution just isn’t there to predict fire behavior on a give acre. It is pretty good if you want to look at an entire HUC.

    http://www.landfire.gov/

  12. tahoeanhiker says - Posted: September 18, 2014

    King fire now at 70,000 acres. Yes, Tahoeblue, that is about double the cleveland fire back in early 90s. this will get much bigger before a line is around it.

  13. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: September 18, 2014

    Yes, the King Fire has burned 70,000 acres and if the wind picks up it will grow even more.Pack your bags if they don’t get this under controll! OLS

  14. Real Spirit says - Posted: September 18, 2014

    We just started a radio campaign on KOH here in Northern Nevada and California – trying to get the word out some advanced air purifiers we have avaliable for Reno/Sparks/Carson City residences suffering from Excessive Smoke. Hope this helps those of you who are diggin’ on the smoke in the air for the past week…
    http://advancedpureair.com/9-stage/index-nav.html

  15. Moral Hazard says - Posted: September 18, 2014

    Cosa, if you ever want to just geek out on this stuff go here: http://iftdss.sonomatech.com/

    You need to ask for a password, but once a member (its free) you will have access to amazing fire behavior, spread, hazard models. Plus it will load an area of interest from a shapefile.

  16. TeaTotal says - Posted: September 18, 2014

    Real Spirit-if you want to advertise your product to try to make a buck off people suffering from this fire, why don’t you pay LTN for it like you do on KKKOH?

  17. Mama Bear says - Posted: September 18, 2014

    I have heard many helicopters flying over Meyers. Just saw one of the ones that look like a giant bug. It had the lines below so I think it was they type that drops water on the fire.
    BTW, has anyone ever seen the Super Scoopers that the firefighters in Canada use? One or two of those type of planes over Lake Tahoe would probably help a bit. Anyone know if there is one in the States?

  18. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: September 18, 2014

    The wind is kicking up here in So. Shore. Hopefully they are getting the King Fire contained before it comes over the summit. With this drought and heavily forested area we could be in serious trouble real fast!
    Is hwy 50 still closed? Be ready to book before you get cooked. OLS

  19. leslie paone says - Posted: September 19, 2014

    we have a cabin at Wrights Lake . How close is it now ?